Skip to main content

Shelf Life: Darkadia

The RPS Social Club this Saturday wasn't all drinking and progessively more excitable and less intelligible video game conversation. Us being geeks, there was also a certain amount of showing one another cool stuff on our smartphones, cool stuff like Darkadia, which came to me courtesy of RPS reader Flimgoblin. In alpha at present, Darkadia is a free service that lets you display all the games you own on a virtual shelf, and I like it quite a lot.

This video of a baby penguin being tickled also did the rounds at one point. Aw!

Cover image for YouTube video
Watch on YouTube

At present, the cool things about Darkadia are simply its enormous catalogue of box art (harvested from the Giant Bomb database) that covers everything from 1980s releases to modern indie games, and that you can choose to view your collection by games you "love", creating your own, personal Hall of Fame, games you own but haven't finished, or even games that you own but haven't played yet.

All good stuff, and Darkadia's roadmap of planned features here includes Steam integration.

I'm hoping we see services like this one honed in the coming years. I love digital distribution like I love my mother, but it's a shame not having a tangible collection to go pawing through. I look at the beautiful box art Locomalito organises for his freeware indie games (you can see it in the bottom right, there), and it saddens me that those aren't objects I can somehow add to a collection. More of this sort of thing!

What features would you like to see in a game display service, readers? I'd like a rudimentary physics engine so that I can use the mouse to throw games which displease me off the shelf and out of the window.

Read this next

Quintin Smith avatar
Quintin Smith: Quinns was one of the first writers to join Rock Paper Shotgun after its founding in 2007, and he stayed with the site until 2011 (though he carried on writing freelance articles well beyond that). These days, you can find him talking about tabletop board games over on Shut Up And Sit Down, or doing proper grown-up journalism with the folks at People Make Games.
View comments (70)

Rock Paper Shotgun is better when you sign in

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.

A line drawing of a cartoon planet with a smiley face, surrounded by a couple of stars and a ring.